FIN 6301Financial Management Instructor:
Mary Chaffin SOM 2.208 972-883-2646 [email protected]
Office Hours: Monday 4:00-6:30 p.m. Wednesday 2:00-3:30 p.m.
Corporate Finance
Ross, Westerfield and Jaffee, 7th Edition www.utdallas.edu/~chaf
Copies of the transparencies. Solutions to end of chapter problems. Old exams.
www.mhhe.com/rwj Appendix D: Using a Financial Calculator. Review material and practice quizzes.
Grading
Exam I 30% or 15% Exam II 30% or 15% Final Exam 40% Assignments 15% Formula sheet allowed on exams - not
quizzes. Notice of Policy on Cheating
The Four Basic Areas of Finance Corporate Finance
Broadest field Specific to operations of a business
Investments Interrelation on a smaller scale then money and capital
markets Money and Capital Markets
Workings of the financial system Broad flow of money
International Finance
Financial Calculators
HP 10B TI BA II+ Tips on using calculator:
Set p/y=1 (This comes set at 12 on a new calculator)
Clear registers before each use Set decimals to 4 places
Solution Methods
Numerical – using regular calculator without financial functions.
Interest Tables - end of text. Financial Calculator – using five specific keys
which correspond to the five most commonly used DCF variables:
N i PV FVPMT
What is Corporate Finance?
Corporate Finance addresses the following three questions:
1. What long-term investments should the firm engage in?
2. How can the firm raise the money for the required investments?
3. How much short-term cash flow does a company need to pay its bills?
Microsoft to Dole OutIts Cash Hoard In an extraordinary move to shower its cash hoard
upon shareholders, Microsoft Corp. said it will make a one-time dividend payment this year of $32 billion and buy back up to $30 billion of the company's stock over the next four years. The company also said it will double the dividend it pays out annually to $3.5 billion, or 32 cents a share.
The plans, which Microsoft valued at up to $75 billion over four years, are believed to represent the largest corporate cash disbursement in history. They mark a turning point for high technology's most successful company.
Capital Structure
The value of the firm can be thought of as a pie.
The goal of the manager is to increase the size of the pie.
The Capital Structure decision can be viewed as how best to slice up a the pie.If how you slice the pie affects the size of the pie, then the capital structure decision matters.
50% Debt
50% Equity
25% Debt
75% Equity
70% Debt
30% Equity
The Financial Manager
To create value, the financial manager should:
1. Try to make smart investment decisions.2. Try to make smart financing decisions.
Corporate Securities as Contingent Claims on Total Firm Value The basic feature of a debt is that it is a
promise by the borrowing firm to repay a fixed dollar amount of by a certain date.
The shareholder’s claim on firm value is the residual amount that remains after the debtholders are paid.
If the value of the firm is less than the amount promised to the debtholders, the shareholders get nothing.
Debt and Equity as Contingent Claims
$F
$F
Payoff to debt holders
Value of the firm (X)
Debt holders are promised $F. If the value of the firm is less than $F, they get the whatever the firm if worth.
If the value of the firm is more than $F, debt holders get a maximum of $F.
$F
Payoff to shareholders
Value of the firm (X)
If the value of the firm is less than $F, share holders get nothing.
If the value of the firm is more than $F, share holders get everything above $F.
Algebraically, the bondholder’s claim is: Min[$F,$X]
Algebraically, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X – $F]
Combined Payoffs to Debt and Equity
$F
$F
Combined Payoffs to debt holders and shareholders
Value of the firm (X)
Debt holders are promised $F.
Payoff to debt holders
Payoff to shareholders
If the value of the firm is less than $F, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X – $F] = $0 and the debt holder’s claim is Min[$F,$X] = $X.
The sum of these is = $X
If the value of the firm is more than $F, the shareholder’s claim is: Max[0,$X – $F] = $X – $F and the debt holder’s claim is:
Min[$F,$X] = $F.
The sum of these is = $X
The Corporate Firm
The corporate form of business is the standard method for solving the problems encountered in raising large amounts of cash.
However, businesses can take other forms.
Forms of Business Organization The Sole Proprietorship The Partnership
General Partnership Limited Partnership
The Corporation Advantages and Disadvantages
Liquidity and Marketability of Ownership Control Liability Continuity of Existence Tax Considerations
Goals of the Corporate Firm
The traditional answer is that the managers of the corporation are obliged to make efforts to maximize shareholder wealth.
The Set-of-Contracts Perspective
The firm can be viewed as a set of contracts. One of these contracts is between shareholders and
managers. The managers will usually act in the shareholders’
interests. The shareholders can devise contracts that align the
incentives of the managers with the goals of the shareholders.
The shareholders can monitor the managers behavior. This contracting and monitoring is costly.
Managerial Goals
Managerial goals may be different from shareholder goals Expensive perquisites Survival Independence
Increased growth and size are not necessarily the same thing as increased shareholder wealth.
Do Shareholders Control Managerial Behavior? Shareholders vote for the board of directors,
who in turn hire the management team. Contracts can be carefully constructed to be
incentive compatible. There is a market for managerial talent—
this may provide market discipline to the managers—they can be replaced.
If the managers fail to maximize share price, they may be replaced in a hostile takeover.
Financial Markets
Primary Market When a corporation issues securities, cash flows
from investors to the firm. Usually an underwriter is involved
Secondary Markets Involve the sale of “used” securities from one
investor to another. Securities may be exchange traded or trade over-
the-counter in a dealer market.